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- How to Prevent Content Theft on Your WordPress Membership Site (Before You Lose Members)by Allison on 30/03/2026 at 10:00
Your WordPress membership content could be circulating on public forums for free right now, and you wouldn’t know it until your revenue starts to drop. Many site owners rely on simple password protection, which does nothing to stop a member from sharing direct download links… Read More » The post How to Prevent Content Theft on Your WordPress Membership Site (Before You Lose Members) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- Stop Losing Sales: How to Add a WooCommerce Cart Reserved Timerby Shahzad Saeed on 27/03/2026 at 10:00
The most frustrating part of running a WooCommerce store is watching a customer add a product to their cart only to disappear at the final second. You did the hard work of getting them to your site, but you miss out on the sale. When… Read More » The post Stop Losing Sales: How to Add a WooCommerce Cart Reserved Timer first appeared on WPBeginner.
- I Found Out How to Easily Accept Przelewy24 Payments in WordPressby Allison on 25/03/2026 at 10:00
If you’re selling to customers in Poland, then not offering payments through Przelewy24 (P24) is likely costing you sales. It is the most trusted local payment method, but many site owners find the integration confusing. I’ve seen many businesses lose Polish customers at the final… Read More » The post I Found Out How to Easily Accept Przelewy24 Payments in WordPress first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- OpenAI Patches ChatGPT Data Exfiltration Flaw and Codex GitHub Token Vulnerabilityby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 30/03/2026 at 18:05
A previously unknown vulnerability in OpenAI ChatGPT allowed sensitive conversation data to be exfiltrated without user knowledge or consent, according to new findings from Check Point. "A single malicious prompt could turn an otherwise ordinary conversation into a covert exfiltration channel, leaking user messages, uploaded files, and other sensitive content," the cybersecurity company said in
- DeepLoad Malware Uses ClickFix and WMI Persistence to Steal Browser Credentialsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 30/03/2026 at 15:47
A new campaign has leveraged the ClickFix social engineering tactic as a way to distribute a previously undocumented malware loader referred to as DeepLoad. "It likely uses AI-assisted obfuscation and process injection to evade static scanning, while credential theft starts immediately and captures passwords and sessions even if the primary loader is blocked," ReliaQuest researchers Thassanai
- ⚡ Weekly Recap: Telecom Sleeper Cells, LLM Jailbreaks, Apple Forces U.K. Age Checks and Moreby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 30/03/2026 at 13:56
Some weeks are loud. This one was quieter but not in a good way. Long-running operations are finally hitting courtrooms, old attack methods are showing up in new places, and research that stopped being theoretical right around the time defenders stopped paying attention. There's a bit of everything this week. Persistence plays, legal wins, influence ops, and at least one thing that looks boring
- 3 SOC Process Fixes That Unlock Tier 1 Productivityby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 30/03/2026 at 13:00
What is really slowing Tier 1 down: the threat itself or the process around it? In many SOCs, the biggest delays do not come from the threat alone. They come from fragmented workflows, manual triage steps, and limited visibility early in the investigation. Fixing those process gaps can help Tier 1 move faster, reduce unnecessary escalations, and improve how the entire SOC responds under pressure
- Russian CTRL Toolkit Delivered via Malicious LNK Files Hijacks RDP via FRP Tunnelsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 30/03/2026 at 12:18
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a remote access toolkit of Russian-origin that's distributed via malicious Windows shortcut (LNK) files that are disguised as private key folders. The CTRL toolkit, according to Censys, is custom-built using .NET and includes various executables" to facilitate credential phishing, keylogging, Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) hijacking, and reverse tunneling








